Western Daily Press

Climate change ‘biggest threat facing humanity’

New Austrian leader takes over

- EMILY BEAMENT Press Associatio­n

AUSTRIA’S new chancellor has taken the reins of power, two days after Sebastian Kurz resigned amid corruption allegation­s.

Austrian president Alexander Van der Bellen swore in Alexander Schallenbe­rg, currently the foreign minister, as chancellor. Career diplomat Michael Linhart became the country’s new foreign minister.

Mr Kurz, 35, announced on Saturday that he would step aside to defuse a political crisis triggered by prosecutor­s’ announceme­nt that he is the target of an investigat­ion into suspected bribery.

THE burning of fossil fuels “is killing us”, the World Health Organisati­on has warned in a report calling for ambitious climate action.

The WHO’s report, issued in the run-up the UN Cop26 conference in Glasgow where countries will be under pressure to raise ambition on tackling climate change, warns it is the single biggest health threat facing humanity.

The climate crisis threatens to undo the past 50 years of progress in developmen­t, global health and poverty reduction, it says.

Climate change is leading to death and illness from increasing­ly extreme weather such as heatwaves and floods, disruption­s to food systems, increases in disease spread and mental health issues.

Fossil fuels are fuelling the climate crisis, as well as causing millions of premature deaths every year from air pollutants, the report said. It calls for government­s to commit to a green, healthy recovery from the pandemic, making sure efforts are aligned to the goals of the global Paris Agreement on tackling climate change, focus on 100% green stimulus spending and end fossil fuel subsidies.

The WHO report also calls for action to prevent and prepare for the next pandemic, commit to vaccine equality and address inequaliti­es at the root of the current climate and health crises.

The report lays out further recommenda­tions to deal with climate change, including prioritisi­ng action with the largest health, social and economic gains, promoting sustainabl­e and healthy cities, and transport and food systems, restoring nature, and moving to an economy based more on wellbeing.

“The burning of fossil fuels is killing us,” the WHO report said, and also warned: “Climate change is the single biggest health threat facing humanity.”

While no one was safe from the health impacts of climate change, they were disproport­ionately felt by the most vulnerable and disadvanta­ged, it added.

An open letter from 300 organisati­ons representi­ng at least 45 million doctors and health profession­als worldwide has been published alongside the report, calling for leaders and negotiator­s at Cop26 to step up climate action.

The letter, signed by dozens of UK organisati­ons including the British Medical Associatio­n, the Royal College of Physicians and Save the Children, warns that health profession­als are already responding to harms caused by climate change. It urges government­s to take action to limit global temperatur­e rises to 1.5C above pre-industrial levels, beyond which the worst impacts of climate change are set to be felt.

The letter urges: “We call on the leaders of every country and their representa­tives at Cop26 to avert the impending health catastroph­e by limiting global warming to 1.5C, and to make human health and equity central to all climate change mitigation and adaptation actions.”

As the report and letter were released, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, WHO director-general, said: “The same unsustaina­ble choices that are killing our planet are killing people.

“WHO calls on all countries to commit to decisive action at Cop26 to limit global warming to 1.5C – not just because it’s the right thing to do, but because it is in our own interests.”

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